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Controversies in Cardiology PDF

415 Pages·2015·9.73 MB·English
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Controversies in Cardiology John A. Ambrose Alfredo E. Rodríguez Editors 123 Controversies in Cardiology John A. Ambrose (cid:129) Alfredo E. Rodríguez Editors Controversies in Cardiology Editors John A. Ambrose Alfredo E. Rodríguez UCSF Fresno Department of Interventional Cardiology Fresno , CA Otamendi Hospital USA Buenos Aires Argentina ISBN 978-3-319-20414-7 ISBN 978-3-319-20415-4 (eBook) DOI 10.1007/978-3-319-20415-4 Library of Congress Control Number: 2015949472 Springer Cham Heidelberg New York Dordrecht London © Springer International Publishing Switzerland 2015 T his work is subject to copyright. All rights are reserved by the Publisher, whether the whole or part of the material is concerned, specifi cally the rights of translation, reprinting, reuse of illustrations, recitation, broadcasting, reproduction on microfi lms or in any other physical way, and transmission or information storage and retrieval, electronic adaptation, computer software, or by similar or dissimilar methodology now known or hereafter developed. T he use of general descriptive names, registered names, trademarks, service marks, etc. in this publication does not imply, even in the absence of a specifi c statement, that such names are exempt from the relevant protective laws and regulations and therefore free for general use. T he publisher, the authors and the editors are safe to assume that the advice and information in this book are believed to be true and accurate at the date of publication. Neither the publisher nor the authors or the editors give a warranty, express or implied, with respect to the material contained herein or for any errors or omissions that may have been made. Printed on acid-free paper S pringer International Publishing AG Switzerland is part of Springer Science+Business Media (www.springer.com) “To our wives, Avis and Marta” Foreword As a clinician, I have always been attracted to the problem-oriented method not only for patient care but also for education. My mentor at Emory, Dr. J. Willis Hurst, was a great advocate of the problem-oriented approach to patient care, and 30 or more years ago my university, Mercer University, established a medical school with the problem-oriented method of education as a centerpiece. The idea of identifying problems and then addressing all aspects of those problems in order to answer spe- cifi c questions is attractive to many clinicians. In medical education, this approach certainly keeps the attention of the student better than the traditional digesting of all the basic sciences and ultimately applying them to clinical problems. So raising questions is important but it is also important to raise the questions about the sub- jects that do not have a universally-agreed upon answer. That seems to be the objec- tive of Drs. John Ambrose and Alfredo Rodríguez in crafting this volume on Controversies in Cardiology. Certainly there are controversies, and in this era, we are easily convinced that things are happening so fast that the controversies are mul- tiplying exponentially. But are these questions as pertinent as they were in the 1950s, 1960s, 1970s or 1980s? One might refl ect on open heart surgery, cardiac electrical pacing, defi brillation, percutaneous intervention for coronary artery disease, man- agement of acute myocardial infarction, and a revolution of effective drugs for hypertension, congestive heart failure and atherosclerosis. Many of these issues of the prior decades may seem non-controversial now. For the patient whose heart beats too slowly to support the circulation, a pacemaker is the answer, and a 10,000 patient randomized controlled trial is clearly not necessary. Some that are not con- troversial now were very controversial then. In the late 1960s, coronary bypass sur- gery for severely symptomatic angina was an example of a highly- controversial subject that, at present, has evolved into the question of which form of revascular- ization should be performed. Drs. Ambrose and Rodríguez have picked 25 of their favorite controversies to explore and have recruited leading experts to probe the existing evidence, as well as current opinion, about these issues. In addition, sugges- tions are made for further investigations needed to bring more clarity. The editors’ bias is clearly toward coronary artery disease and its diagnosis and therapy. Twenty- one chapters deal in some manner with coronary disease and its complications and vii viii Foreword treatment, while only three address the controversies surrounding structural heart disease and only one addresses a rhythm disturbance. A different look reveals that there are two chapters that address risk and prevention. Nine address coronary inter- ventions. Another six address other issues of coronary artery disease, and three deal with access and cost benefi t issues. Others might select different issues to discuss but these favorites of Ambrose and Rodríguez are ones that many of us with a focus on coronary artery disease deal with daily in our own practices. Many of these con- troversies will be settled within the next few years, but many of them will remain and be challenges for the judgment of physicians for years to come. Framing com- mon clinical problems and attempting to answer them is a great contribution because that, in fact, is how we think. My former mentor, Dr. Hurst, and Dr. Eugene Stead often spoke about writing a book which would include the ten things that every cardiologist should know. That book did not materialize, but if it had it would require revisions on a frequent basis because not only the answers to our questions but the questions themselves continue to change. The controversies of today addressed in this book may not be the controversies of tomorrow but we only live in today. Drs. Ambrose and Rodríguez have helped us understand where we live today and what is needed to gain further understanding of what is needed tomorrow. Piedmont Hospital, Atlanta, Georgia Spencer B. King, III, M.D. Pref ace It is quite amazing to have been witnesses to the spectacular evolution of cardiology over the last 30–35 years. Just consider two achievements – the management of acute myocardial infarction and the entire discipline of interventional cardiology. In the 1970s, patients presenting with an acute myocardial infarction with ST elevation and/or pathologic Q waves on ECG (then designated as transmural infarctions) were put to bed rest for about 3 weeks to “recover.” Medications were crude and morbid- ity and mortality were high. Now, the average length of stay for a patient with a STEMI is about 2 days, and in most we aggressively insert metal tubes in their thrombosed arteries that remain open with the appropriate technique and medica- tions. Complications have been drastically reduced and long-term survival and qual- ity of life have improved. Likewise, the entire fi eld of interventional cardiology was no more than a dream in the early 1970s until the pioneering work of Gruntzig and others made it a reality. We have evolved from crude balloons to atherectomy, then to scaffolds, followed by medicated scaffolds and now disappearing scaffolds. Obviously, over these decades, there have been several other examples of these paradigm shifts in how our patients are now managed. What has been responsible for these changes? In some, it has been in the devel- opment of new uses for old medications such as aspirin in ACS, streptokinase for STEMI and colchicine in pericarditis. However, the driving force behind most of these changes that have revolutionized our approaches has been discovery, inven- tion and innovation with the development of new medications and technologies. And the testing ground for these innovations has been, for the most part, random- ized clinical trials. Furthermore, 35 years ago there were few standardized approaches to management and national guidelines were non-existent. Clearly, sev- eral organizations, based on various trial data and expert opinion, now provide direction and options for therapy in several different patient scenarios. However, with such rapid change comes controversy, and not all situations that a cardiologist encounters in caring for patients can always be resolved based on the conventional wisdom of the day. Furthermore, the enthusiasm for a new drug or procedure frequently leads initially to much “off-label” overuse when the new ther- apy is introduced to the general patient population. Additional studies in the form of ix

Description:
This book will consider several clinical and interventional topics for which there is uncertainty, continued debate and/or no consensus based on current guidelines. While there are numerous guidelines in cardiology, new and on-going trials that address new drugs treatments and procedures raise many
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